Courses of Study 2012-2013 
    
    Mar 29, 2024  
Courses of Study 2012-2013 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

General Biology


In Biological Sciences .

Course Offerings 

The General Biology concentration provides an alternative for students who wish to explore several biological disciplines instead of concentrating on only one specific area of biology for in-depth study. Students obtain a breadth of knowledge by taking coursework from at least three different concentrations, but also are exposed to advanced topics by taking a minimum of two upper-level courses. Laboratory coursework beyond that involved in the basic requirements for the major is also required.

General Biology is a particularly good choice for students whose interests lie within more than one established concentration. It also is an appropriate program for students who are not ready to select one focused area for study, by providing guidelines for students who are trying to identify an area of interest. Students in the General Biology concentration are advised by faculty in any of the biology departments. The flexibility of the concentration allows virtually endless combinations of courses to satisfy the requirements, limited only by the scope of the student’s interests and creativity in designing a course of study.

This concentration provides suitable background for students who desire to continue their studies in human or veterinary medicine, or in graduate-level study in biology (most likely in the area the student focused on for advanced study). It is also ideal preparation for careers in teaching, business, or law requiring broad knowledge of the field of biology.

General Biology Requirements


The concentration in general biology requires a minimum of 13 credit hours in addition to courses counted toward requirements 1–9 in Concentrations and Requirements. These 13 credits must include:

A.


One course from each of three different concentrations in biology. Only those courses specifically listed as fulfilling a concentration requirement are acceptable without permission of advisor.

B.


A course with a laboratory (BIOG 1500  and BIOMG 2810  do not fulfill this requirement). Courses such as BIOG 4990 , BIOAP 4130 , BIOEE 2740 , BIOMI 2911 , BIOMG 4400 , BIONB 3240 , BIONB 4300 , BIOPL 2410  may be used to fulfill this requirement. Other laboratory courses may be used. Students should check with their advisor or the Office of Undergraduate Biology for guidance

C.


A minimum of two upper-level (3000 and above) courses of 2 or more credits each.

1000-level courses, BIOG 2990 , and BIOG 4980  are not acceptable for meeting any of these requirements. BIOG 4990  (minimum of 2 credits, but no more than 3 credits) may count as one of the upper-level courses and may count as the laboratory course with approval of the advisor, but it cannot count as a course representing a concentration. Students must use three or more biological sciences courses (with a BIO prefix) to fulfill the requirements of this concentration.

Students may not use more than one course that falls outside of life sciences departments to apply to this concentration. For example, students may not use MATH 2210 , CHEM 2870 , and CS 2110 .

Note:


It is possible to use a single course to fulfill more than one requirement. For example, BIOAP 4130 - Histology: The Biology of the Tissues  could count in all three areas: as a course in the Animal Physiology Concentration, as an upper-level course, and as a course with a lab.